Method of Fabricating Layered Nanomaterial Used for Mid-High Temperature CO2 Capture

ABSTRACT

A material is fabricated for capturing CO 2  at mid-high temperature. The material is a layered material containing Ca, Al carbonates. A higher ratio of Ca to Al helps capturing CO 2 . The temperature for capturing CO 2  is around 600° C. The material can even release CO 2  at a high temperature. Thus, the material can process looping cycles of carbonation and decarbonization at a CO 2  carbonation scale of 45% gCO 2 /g.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to fabricating a CO₂-capturing material; more particularly, relates to fabricating a layered nanomaterial for capturing CO₂ at mid-high temperature.

DESCRIPTION OF THE RELATED ARTS

CO₂ capture from exhaust is a kind of GHG emission reduction technology. Basically, it is a reaction of acid and base, where an alkaline sorbent like amine liquid, alcoholamine or other solid (e.g. naturally occurring minerals, K₂CO₃, CaO, etc.) is used to react with an acidic gas containing CO₂. Since every sorbent has different characteristics, each has to be used within its specific temperature range. One example is to capture CO₂ from fuel gas or flue gas of fossil, including post-combustion and pre-combustion technology.

A commercial CO₂ emission reduction technology is post-combustion capture, where alkaline liquid, like monoethanolamine (MEA) and (2-aminoethyl)ethanolamine (AEEA), is used as CO₂-capturing material from flue gas. Stream temperature is set between 40° C. and 60° C. and CO₂ has a concentration between 6% and 15%. In a typical condition, an absorption tower is used for capturing CO₂, and stripper is used to regenerate rich amine solution. However, it suffers from some disadvantages, such as heat is required for obtaining the lean solution and devices may be corrosive due to high-concentration alcoholamine. This kind of CO₂ capture method belongs to wet chemistry. Basically, system pressure drop is harmful to plant efficiency and is non-friendly technology to environment. Usually, the cost for generating electricity may be increased over 50% and efficiency may be reduced between 15 and 25%. Therefore, above-mentioned wet amine is unsuitable to capture CO₂ at a temperature higher than 400° C.

In order to develop mid-high dry sorbents, there are three kinds of CO₂ sorbents for mid-high temperature between 400 and 800° C. One is a mineral containing Mg, Ca oxides, like serpentine or limestone; another is obtained through synthesis of micro- and nanomaterials, like CaO nanoparticles, metal organic frameworks (MOFs) or hydrotalcite-like compounds having IIA group elements; and, the other is obtained through modification on a high surface area support, like Ca⁺² coated on a support of silica or zeolite. But, their disadvantages are obvious. Although naturally occurring minerals (e.g. CaO and CaCO₃) have carbonation conversions greater than 50%, their cycles of carbonation and regeneration are not stable that, after 10 cycles, efficiency of carbonation becomes lower than 80% owing to sintering. The CO₂-capturing material, like MOFs, containing specific organic or inorganic compound has to be fabricated through a complex procedure with a high cost; not to mention their applications for high temperature is still under developed. The materials obtained through modification on a high surface area support have difficulties on controlling ratios of compounds and thus their characteristics are hard to be controlled either.

Usually, the materials obtained on support containing hydrotalcite are layered inorganic materials formed of oxides and carbonates of Mg⁺² and Al⁺³. Yet, some containing Zn⁺², Ga⁺², Ni⁺², Cu⁺², Mn⁺², Fe⁺³ and Cr⁺³ may be fabricated too. Although the materials obtained on support can be fabricated easily with low cost, most inorganic materials containing Mg⁺²—Al⁺³—CO₃ ²⁻ are not fit to be used for capturing CO₂ at mid-high temperature between 400 and 800° C. Typically, only 2.2 to 5% gCO₂/g is captured at 200° C. Besides, MgCO₃ obtained after capturing CO₂ does not have a high temperature for regeneration, which is 385° C.

CaO has a high carbonation conversion up to 78.5% gCO₂/g theoretically. CaCO₃ is rapidly obtained after capturing CO₂ with a heat of reaction at −178 kJ/mol CO₂, which proves CaO a stable thermodynamic material and a potential CO₂-capturing material while CaCO₃ is decomposed at 750° C. However, some of the reactions between CaO and CO₂ are not reversible; and CaCO₃ may be sintered with grains gathered and pores destroyed.

Hence, the prior arts do not fulfill all users' requests on actual use.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The main purpose of the present invention is to fabricate a nanomaterial for fast capturing CO₂ at mid-high temperature, where the mid-high temperature is 600° C.; and the capturing capacity varies between 20 and 64% g CO₂/g sorbent according to a content ratio of Ca to Al.

To achieve the above purpose, the present invention is a method of fabricating a layered nanomaterial used for mid-high temperature CO₂ capture, comprising steps of: (a) obtaining nitrate solutions of Ca⁺² and Al⁺³ as cationic solutions and obtaining NaOH solutions and Na₂CO₃ solutions as precipitated agents; (b) uniformly mixing the cationic solutions and the precipitated agents into a mixture solution; (c) processing a hydrothermal treatment to the mixture solution; (d) collecting precipitates through centrifugal separation and precipitates and then drying the precipitates to remove impurity of ions; and (f) processing the precipitates at a calcination temperature between 200 and 600° C. to obtain a CO₂-capturing material which has Ca, Al carbonate, where the CO₂-capturing material processes a gas having CO₂ at a temperature between 400 and 800° C. for carbonation and regeneration. Accordingly, a novel method of fabricating a CO₂-capturing nanomaterial for mid-high temperature is obtained.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The present invention will be better understood from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment according to the present invention, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which

FIG. 1 is the flow view showing the preferred embodiment according to the present invention;

FIG. 2 is the view showing the FTIR spectrums of materials having various ratios of Ca:Al;

FIG. 3 is the view showing the FTIR absorption peaks;

FIG. 4 is the view showing the XRD diagram for various calcination temperatures;

FIG. 5 is the view showing the various relationships between the surface areas and the pores;

FIG. 6A and FIG. 6B are the views showing the weight changes at 3:1 ratio and 1:1 ratio;

FIG. 7 is the view showing the CO₂ absorption for various ratios;

FIG. 8 is the view showing the XRD diagram for various ratios after absorbing CO₂;

FIG. 9A and FIG. 9B are the views showing the CO₂ absorption effects at the ratios of 60 ml/min and 10 ml/min;

FIG. 10 is the view showing the CO₂-absorbing amounts at various flowing ratios;

FIG. 11A and FIG. 11B are the views showing the cycles of carbonation and regeneration at 100% and 10% of CO₂/N₂;

FIG. 12 is the view showing the SEM diagram of the layered CO₂-absorbing nanomaterial;

FIG. 13 is the view showing the SEM diagram at 1:1 ratio;

FIG. 14A and FIG. 14B are the first view and the second view showing the TEM diagram at 1:1 ratio; and

FIG. 15A to FIG. 15E are the views showing the SEM diagrams at 3:1 ratio at 25° C., 80° C., 100° C., 125° C. and 150° C.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

The following description of the preferred embodiment is provided to understand the features and the structures of the present invention.

Please refer to FIG. 1, which is a flow view showing a preferred embodiment according to the present invention. As shown in the figure, the present invention is a method of fabricating a layered nanomaterial used for mid-high temperature CO₂ capture, comprising the following steps:

(a) Preparing solutions 11: Nitrate solutions of Ca⁺² and Al⁺³ are obtained as cationic solutions; and NaOH solutions and Na₂CO₃ solutions are obtained as precipitated agents.

(b) Stirring to mix 12: The cationic solutions and the precipitated agents are uniformly mixed into a mixture solution.

(c) Treating hydrothermally 13: A hydrothermal treatment is processed to the mixture solution at about 150° C.

(d) Collecting centrifugally 14: Precipitates of hydroxides and carbonates of Ca and Al are collected through centrifugal separation and precipitation.

(e) Washing and drying 15: The precipitates are washed with water and then are dried to remove impurity of ions.

(f) Calcining at high temperature 16: The precipitates are processed at a calcination temperature between 200° C. and 600° C. to obtain a CO₂-capturing material which has Ca, Al carbonate, Ca—Al—CO₃.

The CO₂-capturing material obtained through the fabricating method has a using method, comprising the following steps:

(a) The CO₂-capturing material having oxides of Ca and Al is obtained.

(b) The CO₂-capturing material contacts with an object containing CO₂.

(c) Carbonation or regeneration is processed with the CO₂-capturing material and the object containing CO₂ at a temperature between 400 and 800° C.

Therein, the using method is based on interactions between CaO and CO₂; and, particles of the CO₂-capturing material are nanoparticles for improving CO₂-capturing efficiency, sized from mesopores to micropores.

On fabricating the CO₂-capturing material of Ca—Al—CO₃, nitrate solutions of Ca⁺² and Al⁺³ having 1 M concentration are obtained as cationic solutions; and NaOH solutions having 1.6 M concentration and Na₂CO₃ solutions having 0.1 M concentration are obtained as precipitated agents. Then, the cationic solutions are added with the precipitated agents. A mixture solution is obtained after stirring to mix uniformly and is placed into an oven for a hydrothermal treatment for 24 hours (hr) at 80˜150° C. Then the mixture solution is taken out for collecting precipitates through centrifugal separation and precipitation. At last, after being water-washed with deionized water several times and being dried, the precipitates are processed at a calcination temperature between 400° C. and 600° C. Thus, the CO₂-capturing material of Ca—Al—CO₃ is obtained.

Please refer to FIG. 2 and FIG. 3, which are views showing FTIR spectrums and FTIR absorption peaks of materials having various ratios of Ca:Al. As shown in the figures, CO₂-capturing materials of Ca—Al—CO₃ having molar ratios of Ca:Al of 3:1, 1:1 and 1:3 are analyzed through FTIR. Therein, a vibration of OH⁻ in a layered microstructure appears at a wavenumber of 3490 cm⁻¹. The H-bonding signals of H₂O and CO₃ ²⁻ in the layered microstructures differ with various composition ratios. For example, the signal lies at 3030 cm⁻¹ for the ratio of 3:1; 3190 cm⁻¹ for 1:1; and 3060 cm⁻¹ for 1:3. A vibration of H₂O bending in the layered microstructure appears at a wavenumber of 1640 cm⁻¹. Absorption peaks of CO₃ ²− lies at wavenumbers of 1390, 810 and 530 cm⁻¹ for the ratio of 3:1; 1390, 1040, 810 and 530 cm⁻¹ for the ratio of 1:1; and, 1390 and 1070 cm⁻¹ for the ratio of 1:3. Star signs (*) in the figure indicate absorption peaks of trace CaCO₃.

Please refer to FIG. 4 and FIG. 5, which are a view showing XRD diagram for various calcination temperatures; and a view showing various relationships between surface areas and pores. As shown in the figures, characteristics of a CO₂-capturing material of Ca—Al—CO₃ are affected by calcination temperature, where crystal figure, surface area and pore size are important characteristics of the CO₂-capturing material. Regarding capturing CO₂ at mid-high temperature, the best temperature for calcination lies around 600° C. According to the XRD diagram of Ca—Al—CO₃, obtained at a ratio of Ca:Al=3:1 at 80° C., under various calcination temperatures between 200° C. and 600° C., uncalcined binary metal hydroxides (raw layered double hydroxides (LDHs)) has a dried layered microstructure with trace CaCO₃. When temperature is raised from 70° C. to 200° C., crystal water in the layered microstructure disappears, yet the layered microstructures of the binary metal hydroxides are remained. When the temperature is raised to 300° C., the layered microstructures of the binary metal hydroxides are still remained, but OH⁻ on Al—OH in octahedron becomes major loss, which turns into H₂O and is lost with CaCO₃ increased. When the temperature is raised to 400° C., the layered microstructures of the binary metal hydroxides crash and OH⁻ on Al—OH in octahedron is the major loss, where the structure becomes amorphous and CaCO₃ has the biggest amount. When the temperature reaches over 400° C., CO₃ ²− in the layered microstructure of the binary metal hydroxides turns into CO₂ and is lost. When the temperature reaches over 500° C., the structure of LDHs totally crash and a part of CaCO₃ is turned into CaO. At last, when the temperature reaches 600° C., the layered microstructures totally crash to form a metal oxide solid solution of CaO and Al₂O₃.

In FIG. 5, changes of the layered microstructures mainly come from thermal instability of inter-layer and intra-layer molecules of OH, H₂O and CO₃ ²−. Hence, when the calcination temperature is gradually raised from 200° C. to 400° C., the layered microstructures of the binary metal hydroxides crash following the raising of the temperature, where a lot of CaCO₃ is created and pores formed increase surface area. When the temperature is raised to 600° C., the CaCO₃ part starts to be decomposed into CaO to form a solid solution with Al₂O₃ combined. Minor part of the pores reduces size on sintering; but major part of the micropore is further increased in size with carbonates escaped as gas. Conclusively, the present invention controls the sintering temperature around 600° C. for CaO to better capture CO₂.

Please refer to FIG. 6A to FIG. 8, which are views showing the weight changes at 3:1 ratio and 1:1 ratio; a view showing CO₂ absorption for various ratios; and a view showing an XRD diagram for various ratios after absorbing CO₂. As shown in the figures, on using a CO₂-capturing material according to the present invention, a CO₂-capturing material of Ca—Al—CO₃ is put in a mixture of hot gas stream of CO₂ and N₂. An interaction of CO₂ and the CaO part in the Ca—Al—CO₃ is used for processing carbonation and regeneration. Therein, when temperature is raised gradually, increase in dynamics of the gases helps physical adsorption reaction on solid surface during capturing CO₂, as shown in Formul.1. When the temperature is raised between 600° C. and 700° C., CO₂ is captured to obtain CaCO₃, as shown in Formul.2. When the temperature is raised between 700° C. and 900° C. or higher, regeneration starts, which is a decomposition of CaCO₃ as shown in Formul.3. The formulas are as follows:

CaO.Al₂ O ₃+CO₂

CaO(CO ₂).Al ₂ O ₃  Formul.1

CaO+CO₂→CaCO₃  Formul.2

CaCO₃→CaO+CO₂  Formul.3

In FIG. 6A and FIG. 6B, increase in Ca helps capturing CO₂. A CO₂-capturing material with Ca:Al=3:1 has a CO₂ adsorption curve 21 at 38.73%; with Ca:Al=1:1, a CO₂ adsorption curve 22 at 17.87%; and, with Ca:Al=1:3, a CO₂ adsorption curve 23 at 1.23%. In FIG. 8, Ca:Al=3:1 has the best crystalline of CaCO₃.

Conclusively, three factors for capturing CO₂ with the material of Ca—Al—CO₃ are Ca content, synthesis temperature and calcination temperature. A material of Ca—Al—CO₃ obtained with a synthesis temperature below 100° C. and with a calcination temperature at 600° C. captures more CO₂ while having more Ca content. For example, materials of Ca—Al—CO₃ having Ca:Al=1:1, 3:1, 5:1, 7:1 and 13:1 capture CO₂ at ratios (g CO₂/g LDH) of 20%, 39%, 49%, 52% and 64%.

Please refer to FIG. 9A to FIG. 10, which are views showing the CO₂ absorption effects at ratios of 60 ml/min and 10 ml/min; and a view showing CO₂-absorbing amounts at various flowing ratios. As shown in the figures, a CO₂-capturing material of Ca—Al—CO₃ with Ca:Al=7:1 is obtained and mixed gases of CO₂/N₂ having densities of 10%, 30% and 100% (pure CO₂) are flown for TGA at an amount of 60 milliliters per minutes (ml/min) and 10 ml/min. In FIG. 9A, amounts of 6, 18 and 60 ml/min of CO₂ are flown in at 60 ml/min. In FIG. 9B, amounts of 1, 3 and 10 ml/min of CO₂ are flown in at 10 ml/min. By comparing FIG. 10 with FIG. 9A, a CO2 adsorption curve 31 for 6 ml/min shows 47% of CO₂ is captured; a CO₂ adsorption curve 32 for 18 ml/min, 49%; and a CO₂ adsorption curve 33 for 60 ml/min, 50%. By comparing FIG. 10 with FIG. 9B, a CO₂ adsorption curve 34 for 1 ml/min shows 41% of CO₂ is captured; a CO₂ adsorption curve 32 for 38 ml/min, 45%; and a CO₂ adsorption curve 32 for 10 ml/min, 48%. As the result shows, the CO₂-capturing material fabricated according to the present invention well captures CO₂ at 600° C.

Please refer to FIG. 11A and FIG. 11B, which are views showing cycles of carbonation and regeneration at 100% and 10% of CO₂/N₂. As shown in the figures, a Ca—Al—CO₃ material with a ratio of Ca:Al=7:1 is used for capturing/releasing CO₂ at 600° C., where CO₂ is flown for TGA with densities of CO₂/N₂ of 100% and 10% at a ratio of 60 ml/min, i.e. 60 ml/min and 6 ml/min of CO₂. After CO₂ is captured at 600° C. for 1 hr, a mixture of CO₂/N₂ is changed to pure N₂ for releasing CO₂ at 750° C. for 1 hr. And the capturing and releasing is thus repeated. Therein, in FIG. 11A, in the first cycle of capturing and releasing, the Ca—Al—CO₃ material captures 45.3% of CO₂ at 600° C. and releases near 100% of CO₂ at 750° C.; in the following three cycles, CO₂ captured is increased to 50% while CO₂ released is still remained at 100%. In FIG. 11B, the curve is almost the same as that in FIG. 11A except that the amount of CO₂ captured is reduced following reducing of the flowing amount of the gas. In the four cycles, a CO₂ carbonation scale of 45% gCO₂/g is remained and a CO₂ decarbonization scale of 100% gCO₂/g is also reached in a short time. Because the layered CO₂-absorbing nanomaterial of a layered material containing Ca, Al carbonates has excellent structural characteristics and is thermotolerant, capturing of CO₂ is almost reversible and cost is thus reduced by increasing the cycles of capturing and releasing.

Please refer to FIG. 12, which is a view showing a SEM diagram of a layered CO₂-absorbing nanomaterial. As shown in the figure, the present invention fabricates a CO₂-capturing material for mid-high temperature which is a layered CO₂-absorbing nanomaterial for capturing CO₂ at mid-high temperature. The layered CO₂-absorbing nanomaterial has a ratio of Ca to Al between 1:1 and 13:1 and has specific LDHs formed of carbonates and hydroxyls of metal oxide microcrystallines to rapidly capture CO₂ in any mixture gas at 600° C. for capturing CO₂ at mid-high temperature. Therein, amount of CO₂ captured is changeable following changes of ratios of Ca to Al for reaching an absorbing ratio of 20˜64% g CO₂/g sorbent, where the ratios of Ca to Al is 1:1, 3:1, 5:1, 7:1 or 13:1.

Please refer to FIG. 13 to FIG. 15B, which are a view showing a SEM diagram at 1:1 ratio; a first view and a second view showing TEM diagrams at 1:1 ratio; and views showing SEM diagrams at 3:1 ratio at 25° C., 80° C., 100° C., 125° C. and 150° C. As shown in the figures, In FIG. 13, a Ca—Al—CO₃ material with a ratio of Ca:Al=1:1 is used to obtain a layered microstructure at 80° C. The microstructure is slitlike with piled layers of size smaller than 100 nanometers (nm), which is a nanostructural material. In FIG. 14A and FIG. 14B, TEM is used for obtaining structural characteristics of the synthesized material in FIG. 13, which is polycrystalline and imperfect stagger arrangements may be formed between synthesis with micropore thus formed. In FIG. 14A, size of each particle is 50 nm and the structure is slitlike with a layer-on-layer arrangement, which is the same as that shown in the SEM diagram. In FIG. 14B, a TEM diagram of crystalline of particle of the layered microstructure with a ratio of Ca:Al=1:1 is shown, where boundaries between domains are shown and the layered microstructure has concaves to prove the porous characteristic.

Besides, because the layered microstructure has a close relationship with reaction temperature, crystalline characteristics improve as temperature becomes higher; and size may be thus changed. In FIG. 15A and FIG. 15B, the slitlike materials fabricated below 100° C. according to the present invention have bigger sizes as the temperature gets higher. Yet, in FIG. 15C to FIG. 15E, when the temperature is higher than 100° C., the size of the layered microstructure grow bigger fast and become non-uniform. As a result shows, a temperature too high is not good for forming micropores and capturing CO₂ later; and, thus, the temperature for the present invention is controlled below 100° C.

To sum up, the present invention is a method of fabricating a layered nanomaterial used for mid-high temperature CO₂ capture, where various ratios of Ca⁺² and Al⁺³ solutions are obtained for precipitation to obtain a layered material containing Ca, Al carbonates at a calcination temperature; the layered material is easily fabricated and the ratio of metal ions is changeable; and the layered material fast absorbs CO₂ and CO₂ is released reversibly between 200 and 800° C.

The preferred embodiment herein disclosed is not intended to unnecessarily limit the scope of the invention. Therefore, simple modifications or variations belonging to the equivalent of the scope of the claims and the instructions disclosed herein for a patent are all within the scope of the present invention. 

1. A method of fabricating a layered nanomaterial used for mid-high temperature CO₂ capture, comprising steps of: (a) obtaining nitrate solutions of Ca⁺² and Al⁺³ as cationic solutions and obtaining NaOH solutions and Na₂CO₃ solutions as precipitated agents; (b) uniformly mixing said cationic solutions and said precipitated agents into a mixture solution; (c) processing a hydrothermal treatment to said mixture solution; (d) obtaining precipitates through centrifugal separation and precipitation; (e) water-washing said precipitates and then drying said precipitates to remove impurity of ions; and (f) processing said precipitates at a calcination temperature between 200° C. and 600° C. to obtain a CO₂-capturing material which has Ca, Al carbonates, wherein said CO₂-capturing material is a layered CO₂-absorbing nanomaterial of Ca—Al—CO₃ having a micropore structure of CaO; wherein said CO₂-capturing material is formed of nanoparticles of Ca and Al having dispersed particle sizes in a ratio range of 1:1 to 13:1 for Ca:Al; wherein said CO₂-capturing material has a structure of specific layered double hydroxides (LDHs) having metal oxide microcrystallines; and wherein said nanoparticles has nanopores from mesopores to micropores.
 2. The method according to claim 1, wherein said precipitates are hydroxides and carbonates of Ca and Al.
 3. The method according to claim 1, wherein, in step (c), said hydrothermal treatment is processed in a room temperature of about 150° C. for 24 hours.
 4. The method according to claim 1, wherein said CO₂-capturing material has a capturing capacity changeable according to a content ratio of Ca to Al; and wherein said content ratio is between 20 and 64% gCO₂/g sorbent
 5. The method according to claim 1, wherein said CO₂-capturing material operates a process to CO₂ under a temperature between 200° C. and 800° C.; and wherein said process to CO₂ is selected from a group consisting of capturing CO₂ and releasing CO₂.
 6. The method according to claim 1, wherein said metal oxide microcrystallines have a layered microstructure formed of carbonates and hydroxyls.
 7. The method according to claim 1, wherein said CO₂-capturing material has a ratio of Ca:Al selected from a group consisting of 1:1, 3:1, 5:1, 7:1 and 13:1. 